What its like to be a parent in a war zone Aala ElKhani

Worldwide, over 1.5 billion people
experience armed conflict.

In response, people are forced
to flee their country,

leaving over 15 million refugees.

Children, without a doubt,

are the most innocent
and vulnerable victims …

but not just from
the obvious physical dangers,

but from the often unspoken effects
that wars have on their families.

The experiences of war
leave children at a real high risk

for the development
of emotional and behavioral problems.

Children, as we can only imagine,

will feel worried, threatened and at risk.

But there is good news.

The quality of care
that children receive in their families

can have a more significant
effect on their well-being

than from the actual experiences of war
that they have been exposed to.

So actually, children can be protected

by warm, secure parenting
during and after conflict.

In 2011, I was a first-year PhD student

in the University of Manchester
School of Psychological Sciences.

Like many of you here,

I watched the crisis in Syria
unfold in front of me on the TV.

My family is originally from Syria,

and very early on,

I lost several family members
in really horrifying ways.

I’d sit and I’d gather with my family
and watch the TV.

We’ve all seen those scenes:

bombs destroying buildings,

chaos, destruction

and people screaming and running.

It was always the people screaming
and running that really got me the most,

especially those
terrified-looking children.

I was a mother to two young,
typically inquisitive children.

They were five and six then,

at an age where they typically
asked lots and lots of questions,

and expected real, convincing answers.

So, I began to wonder
what it might be like

to parent my children
in a war zone and a refugee camp.

Would my children change?

Would my daughter’s bright,
happy eyes lose their shine?

Would my son’s really relaxed and carefree
nature become fearful and withdrawn?

How would I cope?

Would I change?

As psychologists and parent trainers,

we know that arming parents
with skills in caring for their children

can have a huge effect
on their well-being,

and we call this parent training.

The question I had was,

could parent training programs
be useful for families

while they were still in war zones
or refugee camps?

Could we reach them
with advice or training

that would help them
through these struggles?

So I approached my PhD supervisor,

Professor Rachel Calam,

with the idea of using my academic skills
to make some change in the real world.

I wasn’t quite sure
what exactly I wanted to do.

She listened carefully and patiently,

and then to my joy she said,

“If that’s what you want to do,
and it means so much to you,

then let’s do it.

Let’s find ways to see if parent programs

can be useful for families
in these contexts.”

So for the past five years,
myself and my colleagues –

Prof. Calam and Dr. Kim Cartwright –

have been working
on ways to support families

that have experienced
war and displacement.

Now, to know how to help families
that have been through conflict

support their children,

the first step must obviously be
to ask them what they’re struggling with,

right?

I mean, it seems obvious.

But it’s often those
that are the most vulnerable,

that we’re trying to support,

that we actually don’t ask.

How many times have we just assumed
we know exactly the right thing

that’s going to help someone or something
without actually asking them first?

So I travelled to refugee camps
in Syria and in Turkey,

and I sat with families, and I listened.

I listened to their parenting challenges,

I listened to their parenting struggles

and I listened to their call for help.

And sometimes that was just paused,

as all I could do was hold hands with them

and just join them
in silent crying and prayer.

They told me about their struggles,

they told me about the rough,
harsh refugee camp conditions

that made it hard to focus
on anything but practical chores

like collecting clean water.

They told me how they watched
their children withdraw;

the sadness, depression, anger,

bed-wetting, thumb-sucking,
fear of loud noises,

fear of nightmares –

terrifying, terrifying nightmares.

These families had been through
what we had been watching on the TV.

The mothers –

almost half of them
were now widows of war,

or didn’t even know
if their husbands were dead or alive –

described how they felt
they were coping so badly.

They watched their children change
and they had no idea how to help them.

They didn’t know how to answer
their children’s questions.

What I found incredibly astonishing
and so motivational

was that these families were
so motivated to support their children.

Despite all these challenges they faced,

they were trying to help their children.

They were making attempts
at seeking support from NGO workers,

from refugee camp teachers,

professional medics,

other parents.

One mother I met had only been
in a camp for four days,

and had already made two attempts

at seeking support
for her eight-year-old daughter

who was having terrifying nightmares.

But sadly, these attempts
are almost always useless.

Refugee camp doctors, when available,

are almost always too busy,

or don’t have the knowledge or the time
for basic parenting supports.

Refugee camp teachers and other parents
are just like them –

part of a new refugee community
who’s struggling with new needs.

So then we began to think.

How could we help these families?

The families were struggling with things
much bigger than they could cope with.

The Syrian crisis made it clear

how incredibly impossible it would be
to reach families on an individual level.

How else could we help them?

How would we reach families
at a population level

and low costs

in these terrifying, terrifying times?

After hours of speaking to NGO workers,

one suggested a fantastic innovative idea

of distributing parenting
information leaflets via bread wrappers –

bread wrappers that were being delivered
to families in a conflict zone in Syria

by humanitarian workers.

So that’s what we did.

The bread wrappers haven’t changed
at all in their appearance,

except for the addition
of two pieces of paper.

One was a parenting information leaflet
that had basic advice and information

that normalized to the parent
what they might be experiencing,

and what their child
might be experiencing.

And information on how they could
support themselves and their children,

such as information like spending
time talking to your child,

showing them more affection,

being more patient with your child,

talking to your children.

The other piece of paper
was a feedback questionnaire,

and of course, there was a pen.

So is this simply leaflet distribution,

or is this actually a possible means
of delivering psychological first aid

that provides warm,
secure, loving parenting?

We managed to distribute
3,000 of these in just one week.

What was incredible was
we had a 60 percent response rate.

60 percent of the 3,000
families responded.

I don’t know how many
researchers we have here today,

but that kind of response
rate is fantastic.

To have that in Manchester
would be a huge achievement,

let alone in a conflict zone in Syria –

really highlighting how important
these kinds of messages were to families.

I remember how excited and eager we were
for the return of the questionnaires.

The families had left
hundreds of messages –

most incredibly positive and encouraging.

But my favorite has got to be,

“Thank you for not forgetting
about us and our children.”

This really illustrates
the potential means

of the delivery of psychological
first aid to families,

and the return of feedback, too.

Just imagine replicating this
using other means

such as baby milk distribution,
or female hygiene kits,

or even food baskets.

But let’s bring this closer to home,

because the refugee crisis

is one that is having an effect
on every single one of us.

We’re bombarded with images daily
of statistics and of photos,

and that’s not surprising,

because by last month,

over one million refugees
had reached Europe.

One million.

Refugees are joining our communities,

they’re becoming our neighbors,

their children are attending
our children’s schools.

So we’ve adapted the leaflet
to meet the needs of European refugees,

and we have them online, open-access,

in areas with a really high
refugee influx.

For example, the Swedish healthcare
uploaded it onto their website,

and within the first 45 minutes,

it was downloaded 343 times –

really highlighting how important it is

for volunteers, practitioners
and other parents

to have open-access,
psychological first-aid messages.

In 2013, I was sitting on the cold,
hard floor of a refugee camp tent

with mothers sitting around me
as I was conducting a focus group.

Across from me stood an elderly lady

with what seemed to be
a 13-year-old girl lying beside her,

with her head on the elderly lady’s knees.

The girl stayed quiet
throughout the focus group,

not talking at all,

with her knees
curled up against her chest.

Towards the end of the focus group,

and as I was thanking
the mothers for their time,

the elderly lady looked at me
while pointing at the young girl,

and said to me, “Can you help us with…?”

Not quite sure what she expected me to do,

I looked at the young girl and smiled,

and in Arabic I said,

“Salaam alaikum. Shu-ismak?”

“What’s your name?”

She looked at me really
confused and unengaged,

but then said, “Halul.”

Halul is the pet’s name
for the Arabic female name, Hala,

and is only really used
to refer to really young girls.

At that point I realized that actually
Hala was probably much older than 13.

It turns out Hala was a 25-year-old
mother to three young children.

Hala had been a confident,
bright, bubbly, loving, caring mother

to her children,

but the war had changed all of that.

She had lived through bombs
being dropped in her town;

she had lived through explosions.

When fighter jets
were flying around their building,

dropping bombs,

her children would be screaming,
terrified from the noise.

Hala would frantically grab pillows
and cover her children’s ears

to block out the noise,

all the while screaming herself.

When they reached the refugee camp

and she knew they were finally
in some kind of safety,

she completely withdrew
to acting like her old childhood self.

She completely rejected her family –

her children, her husband.

Hala simply could no longer cope.

This is a parenting struggle
with a really tough ending,

but sadly, it’s not uncommon.

Those who experience
armed conflict and displacement

will face serious emotional struggles.

And that’s something we can all relate to.

If you have been through
a devastating time in your life,

if you have lost someone
or something you really care about,

how would you continue to cope?

Could you still be able
to care for yourself and for your family?

Given that the first years
of a child’s life are crucial

for healthy physical
and emotional development,

and that 1.5 billion people
are experiencing armed conflict –

many of whom are now
joining our communities –

we cannot afford to turn a blind eye

to the needs of those
who are experiencing war and displacement.

We must prioritize
these families' needs –

both those who are internally displaced,
and those who are refugees worldwide.

These needs must be prioritized
by NGO workers, policy makers,

the WHO, the UNHCR
and every single one of us

in whatever capacity it is
that we function in our society.

When we begin to recognize
the individual faces of the conflict,

when we begin to notice
those intricate emotions on their faces,

we begin to see them as humans, too.

We begin to see
the needs of these families,

and these are the real human needs.

When these family needs are prioritized,

interventions for children
in humanitarian settings

will prioritize and recognize the primary
role of the family in supporting children.

Family mental health
will be shouting loud and clear

in global, international agenda.

And children will be less likely
to enter social service systems

in resettlement countries

because their families
would have had support earlier on.

And we will be more open-minded,

more welcoming, more caring

and more trusting to those
who are joining our communities.

We need to stop wars.

We need to build a world where children
can dream of planes dropping gifts,

and not bombs.

Until we stop armed conflicts
raging throughout the world,

families will continue to be displaced,

leaving children vulnerable.

But by improving parenting
and caregiver support,

it may be possible to weaken the links
between war and psychological difficulties

in children and their families.

Thank you.

(Applause)

全世界有超过 15 亿人
经历武装冲突。

作为回应,人们
被迫逃离自己的国家,

留下超过 1500 万难民。

毫无疑问,儿童

是最无辜
和最脆弱的受害者……

但不仅仅是
因为明显的身体危险,


因为战争对他们的家庭造成的往往不言而喻的影响。

战争的经历
使儿童面临

情绪和行为问题发展的真正高风险。

正如我们所能想象的那样,孩子们

会感到担心、受到威胁和处于危险之中。

但有好消息。

儿童在家庭中接受的护理质量

对他们的幸福感的影响可能

比他们所经历的实际战争经历更显
着。

所以实际上,在冲突期间和之后,孩子们可以

通过温暖、安全的养育方式得到保护

2011年,我

是曼彻斯特
大学心理科学学院一年级博士生。

像在座的许多人一样

,我在电视上看到叙利亚危机在我面前展开。

我的家人最初来自叙利亚,

很早以前,


以非常可怕的方式失去了几个家庭成员。

我会坐下来和家人聚在一起
看电视。

我们都看过那些场景:

炸弹摧毁建筑物、

混乱、破坏

和人们尖叫和奔跑。

最让我感动的总是那些尖叫
和奔跑的人,

尤其是那些
看起来很害怕的孩子。

我是两个年轻的、
通常好奇的孩子的母亲。

那时他们 5 岁和 6

岁,在这个年龄,他们通常会
问很多很多问题,

并期望得到真实的、令人信服的答案。

所以,我开始想知道在战区和难民营

养育我的孩子会是什么样子

我的孩子会改变吗?

我女儿明亮、
快乐的眼睛会失去光泽吗?

儿子本来真的轻松无忧无虑的天性会不会
变得恐惧孤僻?

我将如何应对?

我会改变吗?

作为心理学家和家长培训师,

我们知道让父母
掌握照顾孩子的技能

会对他们的幸福感产生巨大影响

,我们称之为家长培训。

我的问题是

,父母培训计划

仍在战区
或难民营的家庭有用吗?

我们能否向他们
提供

可以帮助
他们度过这些困难的建议或培训?

因此,我找到了我的博士生导师

雷切尔·卡拉姆教授,

想利用我的学术技能
对现实世界做出一些改变。

我不太确定
我到底想做什么。

她仔细而耐心地听着,

然后她很高兴地说:

“如果那是你想做的事,
而且对你来说意义重大,

那就去做吧。

让我们想办法看看家长

计划是否对中国的家庭有用
。 这些背景。”

所以在过去的五年里,
我和我的同事

——Calam 教授和 Kim Cartwright 博士——

一直在努力

经历过
战争和流离失所的家庭提供支持。

现在,要知道如何帮助
经历过冲突的家庭

支持他们的孩子

,第一步显然
必须问他们在挣扎什么,

对吗?

我的意思是,这似乎很明显。

但往往是
那些最脆弱的

,我们试图支持

,我们实际上并没有问。

有多少次,我们只是假设
我们完全知道

可以帮助某人或某事的正确方法,
而无需事先询问他们?

所以我去
了叙利亚和土耳其的难民营,

和家人坐在一起,听着。

我倾听他们的育儿挑战,

我倾听他们的育儿斗争

,我倾听他们寻求帮助的呼声。

有时这只是暂停,

因为我所能做的就是和他们手牵手,和他们

一起默默地哭泣和祈祷。

他们告诉我他们的挣扎,

他们告诉我难民营的恶劣、
严酷条件


除了

收集干净的水之类的实际琐事之外,他们很难专注于任何事情。

他们告诉我他们是如何看着
他们的孩子退缩的;

悲伤、沮丧、愤怒、

尿床、吸拇指、
害怕大声喧哗、

害怕噩梦——

可怕的、可怕的噩梦。

这些家庭经历
了我们在电视上看到的一切。

母亲们——

其中几乎一半
现在已经成为战争的寡妇,

或者甚至不
知道他们的丈夫是死是活——

描述了他们觉得
自己应对得如此糟糕的感受。

他们看着他们的孩子改变
,他们不知道如何帮助他们。

他们不知道如何回答
孩子的问题。

我发现令人难以置信
且如此鼓舞人心的

是,这些家庭
如此积极地支持他们的孩子。

尽管他们面临所有这些挑战,

他们仍在努力帮助他们的孩子。

他们
试图寻求非政府组织工作人员

、难民营教师、

专业医务人员和

其他父母的支持。

我遇到的一位母亲只
在营地呆了四天

,就已经两次尝试

她正在做可怕噩梦的八岁女儿寻求支持。

但遗憾的是,这些
尝试几乎总是无用的。

难民营医生(如果有的话)

几乎总是太忙,

或者没有知识或时间
来获得基本的育儿支持。

难民营的老师和其他家长
和他们一样——

是一个新的难民社区的一部分,
他们正在努力满足新的需求。

于是我们开始思考。

我们如何帮助这些家庭?

这些家庭正在努力
应对比他们能够应付的更大的事情。

叙利亚危机清楚地表明

,在个人层面上接触家庭是多么不可能。

我们还能如何帮助他们? 在这些可怕、可怕的时代,

我们将如何
在人口水平

和低成本的情况下接触到家庭

在与非政府组织工作人员交谈数小时后,

有人提出了一个奇妙的创新

想法,即
通过面包包装纸分发育儿信息传单——人道主义工作者

正在
向叙利亚冲突地区的家庭提供面包包装纸

这就是我们所做的。

面包纸的外观并没有任何变化

只是多
了两张纸。

一个是育儿信息传单
,其中包含基本的建议和信息

,使父母能够正常化
他们可能正在经历的

事情,以及他们的孩子
可能正在经历的事情。

以及有关他们如何
支持自己和孩子的

信息,例如花
时间与您的孩子交谈、

向他们表达更多的爱、

对您的孩子更有耐心、与您的

孩子交谈等信息。

另一张纸
是反馈问卷

,当然,还有一支笔。

那么,这只是简单的传单分发,

还是实际上是一种可能
的提供心理急救的方法

,提供温暖、
安全、充满爱的养育方式?

我们设法
在一周内分发了其中的 3,000 个。

令人难以置信的是
我们有 60% 的响应率。

3,000
个家庭中有 60% 做出了回应。

我不知道
我们今天有多少研究人员,

但这种反应
速度非常棒。

在曼彻斯特拥有这一
点将是一项巨大的成就,

更不用说在叙利亚的冲突地区——

真正突出了
这些信息对家庭的重要性。

我记得我们是多么兴奋和
渴望问卷的返回。

这些家庭留下了
数百条信息——

最令人难以置信的积极和鼓舞人心的信息。

但我最喜欢的是,

“谢谢你没有
忘记我们和我们的孩子。”

这确实说明

向家庭提供心理急救

以及反馈反馈的潜在方式。

试想一下,使用其他方式来复制这一点,

例如婴儿牛奶分配
、女性卫生用品包,

甚至是食品篮。

但是让我们把这件事说得离家更近一些,

因为难民危机

对我们每一个人都产生了影响。

我们每天
都被统计数据和照片的图像轰炸

,这并不奇怪,

因为到上个月,

已有超过一百万
难民到达欧洲。

一百万。

难民正在加入我们的社区,

他们正在成为我们的邻居,

他们的孩子正在
我们孩子的学校上学。

因此,我们调整了传单
以满足欧洲难民的需求,

并且在难民涌入非常高的地区,我们将它们放在网上,开放获取

例如,瑞典医疗保健机构
将其上传到他们的网站

,在最初的 45 分钟内,

它被下载了 343 次——

真正强调了

对于志愿者、从业者
和其他父母

来说,拥有开放获取的
心理急救信息是多么重要 .

2013 年,我坐在
难民营帐篷冰冷坚硬的地板上

,妈妈们围坐在我
身边,我正在主持一个焦点小组。

我对面站着一位老妇人


旁边躺着一个看起来像是十三岁的女孩,

头靠在老妇人的膝盖上。

女孩在
整个焦点小组中保持安静,

根本不说话

,膝盖
蜷缩在胸前。

焦点小组快结束时

,当我
感谢母亲们的时间时

,老太太看着我
,指着小女孩

,对我说:“你能帮我们……吗?”

不太确定她希望我做什么,

我看着年轻女孩笑了笑

,我用阿拉伯语说:

“Salaam alaikum。Shu-ismak?”

“你叫什么名字?”

她看着我真的很
困惑,没有参与,

但随后说,“哈鲁尔。”

Halul是
阿拉伯女性名字Hala的宠物名称

,仅用于
指代真正年轻的女孩。

那时我意识到
哈拉实际上可能比 13 岁大得多。

事实证明,哈拉是一个 25 岁的
母亲,有三个孩子。

哈拉对她的孩子们来说是一个自信、
聪明、活泼、充满爱心、体贴的母亲

但战争改变了这一切。

她经历过
在她的城镇投下炸弹的经历;

她经历过爆炸。

当战斗机
在他们的建筑物周围飞行,

投下炸弹时,

她的孩子们会尖叫起来,
被噪音吓坏了。

哈拉会疯狂地抓起枕头
,捂住孩子们的耳朵

来挡住噪音

,同时自己也在尖叫。

当他们到达难民营

,她知道他们
终于安全了,

她完全退缩
了,表现得像她童年时代的自己。

她完全拒绝了她的家人——

她的孩子,她的丈夫。

哈拉根本无法应付。

这是一场育儿斗争
,结局非常艰难,

但遗憾的是,这种情况并不少见。

那些经历过
武装冲突和流离失所的人

将面临严重的情感斗争。

这是我们都可以联系到的。

如果你
在生活中经历了一段毁灭性的时光,

如果你失去
了你真正关心的人或事,

你将如何继续应对?


还能照顾好自己和家人吗?

鉴于儿童生命的最初几年

对健康的
身心发展至关重要,

而且 15 亿人
正在经历武装冲突——

其中许多人现在正在
加入我们的社区——

我们不能

对这些需求视而不见
那些正在经历战争和流离失所的人。

我们必须优先考虑
这些家庭的需求——

包括国内流离失所
者和世界各地的难民。

非政府组织工作人员、政策制定者

、世界卫生组织、难民署
以及我们每个人都必须优先考虑这些需求

,无论我们以何种身份
在社会中发挥作用。

当我们开始识别
冲突的个体面孔时,

当我们开始注意到
他们脸上那些错综复杂的情绪时,

我们也开始将他们视为人类。

我们开始看到
这些家庭的需求,

而这些才是人类真正的需求。

当这些家庭需求被优先考虑时,人道主义环境中

对儿童的干预

将优先考虑并承认
家庭在支持儿童方面的主要作用。

家庭心理健康

在全球、国际议程中大声疾呼。

并且儿童将不太
可能进入

重新安置国家的社会服务系统,

因为他们的家人
会更早地得到支持。

我们将对加入我们社区的人更开放、

更热情、更关心

和更信任

我们需要停止战争。

我们需要建立一个孩子们
可以梦想飞机投下礼物

而不是炸弹的世界。

在我们停止
在世界范围内肆虐的武装冲突之前,

家庭将继续流离失所,

使儿童处于弱势。

但通过改善养育子女
和照顾者的支持

,可能会削弱
战争与

儿童及其家庭心理困难之间的联系。

谢谢你。

(掌声)